VIPW(8) | System Manager's Manual | VIPW(8) |
vipw
— edit the
password file
vipw |
[-d directory] |
The vipw
utility edits the password file
after setting the appropriate locks, and does any necessary processing after
the password file is unlocked. If the password file is already locked for
editing by another user, vipw
will ask you to try
again later. The default editor for vipw
is
vi(1).
When run without options, vipw
will work
with the password files in /etc. The
-d
option may be used to specify an alternative
directory to work with.
The vipw
utility performs a number of
consistency checks on the password entries, and will not allow a password
file with a “mangled” entry to be installed. If
vipw
rejects the new password file, the user is
prompted to re-enter the edit session.
Once the information has been verified,
vipw
uses pwd_mkdb(8) to update
the user database. This is run in the background, and, at very large sites
could take several minutes. Until this update is completed, the password
file is unavailable for other updates and the new information is not
available to programs.
If the following environment variable exists it will be utilized
by vipw
:
EDITOR
EDITOR
will be
invoked instead of the default editor vi(1). This can be
used to allow a script to non-interactively modify the password file.PW_SCAN_BIG_IDS
The vipw
utility appeared in
4.0BSD.
The mechanism for checking for password file modifications
requires that the modification time of the password file changes. This means
that in a default configuration where file system timestamps are not
calculated with sub-second precision, EDITOR
has to
run for at least one second. Non-interactive editor scripts should invoke
sleep(1) or equivalent to ensure this happens.
February 14, 2012 | Mac OS X 12 |